MYDIN, Malaysia’s largest Halal hypermarket and retail chain, won praise today from the international NGO Lever Foundation for committing to selling only cage-free eggs at all of its locations nationwide by 2030.
“We will continue to work with our suppliers and customers to achieve our goal of selling 100% cage-free eggs in Mydin supermarkets by 2030. The transition will begin at selected stores from March 2023 and be extended to all stores throughout Malaysia.,” shares MYDIN.
The shift will be adopted across the company’s 66 hypermarkets, emporiums, and other retail outlets nationally.
“We congratulate MYDIN on setting this excellent cage-free egg goal, which will further boost food safety and quality for customers while also improving the welfare of laying hens,” said Vilosha Sivaraman, Sustainability Program Manager at Lever Foundation, which worked with MYDIN on its commitment.
“The new goal demonstrates MYDIN’s passion and attention to providing high quality and sustainable products for its customers and will set an example for other retailers in Malaysia.”
Animal protection and food safety organizations around the world encourage a switch to cage-free eggs, which are more humane to animals and safer for consumers.
Research by the European Food Safety Authority and others has found that cage-free egg farms are up to 25 times less likely to be contaminated with key strains of salmonella compared to hens raised in cages.
Battery cage egg production has been banned throughout the European Union as well as in Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Canada, India, and parts of the United States.
In recent years, a growing list of food brands has pledged to use only cage-free eggs across Asia.
In Malaysia, restaurant and café chains such as Old Town White Coffee and O’Briens Irish Sandwich Cafe, and Hospitality Groups such as Hatten Hotels, Ascott Malaysia and Banyan Tree, are among the many companies that have set their own timelines for shifting to use only cage-free eggs.
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Cover image via FB/ MYDIN Malaysia